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Emma and Regina make their way home from the wish realm. When they return to Storybrooke something has changed between them. Rated M for later chapters.
Bookmarked by Tcristina
11 Nov 2025
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Sixteen-year-old Leila has spent her entire life being passed around the foster system. She's never known her parents, never known much more than that she was born with a hole in her heart and nobody, even her birth parents, had wanted her. A few days before her sixteenth birthday, Leila is fed up with the system and ready to be emancipated. She travels to a town called Storybrooke, Maine in search of her birth parents who, according to her paperwork, had never legally signed their rights away. This endeavor leads her to Regina Mills and Emma Swan, two completely opposite women with a seemingly complicated history and one very important thing in common: their names on Leila’s birth certificate.
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- English
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- 261,184
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- 22/22
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Bookmarked by Tcristina
11 Nov 2025
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It's Henry's birthday and Emma's got a present for him. And Regina.
Bookmarked by Tcristina
10 Nov 2025
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Prompt: Emma brings toddler Henry to class because the babysitter cancelled last minute and she doesn't have no one can take care of him. In the middle of the class Henry starts crying and Emma gets up to leave - but to everyone's surprise Regina Mills takes the kid in her arms and continues teaching.
Series
- Part 1 of Idiots go to College
Bookmarked by Tcristina
10 Nov 2025
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Summary
3B AU. Emma and Henry’s fake memories wrote Regina into their lives as a dead wife and mother. Henry can barely remember a thing, but he knows that nothing about Storybrooke, Maine makes any sense, and everyone is looking at him like they’re afraid of saying something they aren’t supposed to. In fact, he thinks the only person who might not be lying to him is the mayor. Regina Mills.
He turns when someone drops down beside him like he’s expecting to see her there, book in hand and reading glasses slipping down her nose, but it’s just Ma, and she’s alone. She’s not leaning over the back of the couch to nudge Mom’s glasses back into place, or grin when Mom swats her hand away. She just sighs, and they’re alone.
(And in the memory, his mom has no face. His therapist says this is normal. Trauma affects the memory in complex ways, Henry.
Whatever. What kind of person forgets what their mom looked like?)
Bookmarked by Tcristina
10 Nov 2025

